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Innovations
in Agricultural Credit Delivery - Rationalization and Policy
Responses
-A Synoptic Note*
Institutional credit to the agricultural sector,
after the introduction of the HYV associated technology (Green
Revolution), has helped the farmers in adopting the new technology
for boosting their production and productivity as also increasing
their income levels. Bank credit also played a crucial role in
augmenting the capital formation in the private sector in the
agriculture sector of the country. The introduction of the
Financial Sector Reforms in the early 90’s brought to the fore the
primacy of the financial health of banks, especially the public
sector banks, including their sustained viability. The entry of
new generation private banks, domestic and foreign, did increase
the level of competition and banks had a compelling reason to
innovate to face the challenge of the competition and stay afloat.
The innovations that came about in the financial sector,
especially in agricultural credit, can be discerned at two levels.
The first is the institutional arrangement for streamlining the
credit delivery system including permitting entry of new entities
like Local Area Banks (LAB) and the second level is at the level
of processes and products. Such innovations were also largely
facilitated by the breakthroughs achieved in the Information and
Communications Technology and helped banks extend their outreach
in rural areas and also in reducing their transaction costs.
In the former
category is the evolving of the micro-finance programme through
the SHG-Bank Linkage movement involving NGO, MFI and Banks that
helped the poor in breaking the “poverty trap” through easy access
to institutional credit and in improving the standard of living of
the rural populace by augmenting their income levels. Some
examples of these are the Self Help Groups (SHG), Grameen Bank
Model, the Joint Liability Group and SGSY. In the wake of the
integration of financial and commodity markets across the world
economies, opportunities are available for banks to innovate and
experiment with new processes and products to finance a host of
activities and investment in the agricultural sector. Financing of
contract farming and warehouse receipt financing can be bracketed
in this category.
One of the
policy responses of the GoI in 2005-06 has been to amalgamate the
RRBs of a sponsor bank in a State to bring out economies of scale
of operation and improve the financial health of these
institutions. The number of RRBs has come down from 196 to 86 by
March 2009 (45 amalgamated and 41 standalone).
In the wake of
the findings of the NSSO Report on the increasing dependence of
farm households on non-formal sources of credit, especially, the
private moneylenders, the GoI’s policy response was to introduce
the package of doubling of agricultural credit by banks in 2004.
One of the components of the package was the Debt Swap Scheme
under the banks were expected to redeem the loans of farmers taken
from private money lenders and also finance them afresh. The GoAP
also introduced two innovative schemes of debt swap. The first one
was under the Indira Kranti Padham (IKP) under which the SHGs get
loans upto Rs. 5 lakh, of which 50 per cent could be used for
liquidating loans taken from money lenders. The State Level
Bankers’ Committee (SLBC) formulated the second scheme and covers
individual farmers. The dues to the moneylender would be settled
directly by the bank through a cheque and the upper limit for
existing borrowers is 50 per cent of the existing credit limit on
crop loans with a cap of Rs. 50,000 while for new farmers, the
limit is equivalent to a KCC limit based on cropping pattern and
scales of finance and 50 per cent of limit for debt swap with a
cap of Rs. 25,000.
The introduction
of the Kisan Credit Card (KCC) in 1998 could be considered as a
process and product innovation to facilitate easy access to
production credit from Banks and coverage was extended to both
investment and consumption loans in later years. More than 8 crore
KCC are reported to have issued by Banks since its inception.
Following the recommendations of the
Committee on Financial Inclusion, two funds, viz., Financial
Inclusion Fund and Financial Inclusion Technology Fund were
instituted to accelerate the process of achieving access to
comprehensive financial services to at least 50 per cent of the
excluded rural households by the year 2012. With a view to
redressing Financial Exclusion in unbanked areas, the RBI
permitted banks to use the services of NGOs, SHGs, MFIs and other
civil society organizations as their intermediaries for providing
financial and banking services through the use of business
facilitators and business correspondent model. The scheme has been
implemented in many parts of the country.
Researchers are encouraged to base
their contributions on micro-level empirical studies on any aspect
of the innovations listed in the note and may address any of the
following issues. They are indicative and paper writers can
address to any other issues having bearing on credit delivery and
outreach.
a)
Has the outreach of the banks increased in terms of the credit
widening and deepening due to the innovations?
b)
What are the factors/policies such as financial sector reforms in
improving or reducing the access to credit?
c)
What are the alternative innovations in vogue to improve the
credit outreach and what are the comparative costs and benefits of
such innovations? Any better alternatives can be suggested?
d)
Is
there a reduction in the transaction costs both from the banks’
and borrowers point of view and, if so, what is the magnitude of
such reduction?
e)
Does the reduction in the transaction cost result in increased
profitability of the banks in agricultural lending? Are the
benefits of reduction in transaction costs passed on to the
borrowers and if so, to what extent?
f)
What are the impacts of innovations on the asset less poor and the
marginal/small farmers who have limited access to formal
institutional sources of credit?
g)
What is the impact of amalgamation of Regional Rural Banks in
terms of outreach, portfolio diversification, productivity and
profitability?
*Prepared by B.Jayaraman, General Manager, Department of
Economic Analysis and Research, NABARD, HO,
Mumbai.
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